Abstract

Introduction and ObjectiveIntravenous iron preparations rapidly correct iron deficiency anemia, with the notable drug class effect of rare, yet potentially life-threatening, administration-related hypersensitivity or anaphylactic reactions. The objective of this comparative study was to assess adverse events associated with four intravenous iron preparations and estimated medical costs, in the US Food and Drug Administration Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS) database.MethodsCases of hypersensitivity reactions and anaphylaxis/anaphylactic shock associated with iron dextran, iron sucrose, ferumoxytol, and ferric carboxymaltose, spontaneously reported to FAERS (1 January, 2014 to 31 December, 2019), were extracted. The reporting odds ratio lower bound 90% confidence interval (ROR05) > 1 and cases ≥ 5 defined a likely signal for a drug–adverse event association. Adverse event-associated medical costs were estimated using Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality/Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project 2016 data.ResultsFor hypersensitivity reactions, ferumoxytol and iron dextran had the highest ROR05 values (5.00 and 4.35, respectively) and greatest proportions of associated deaths (7.1% and 5.3%), followed by iron sucrose (ROR05 3.94, deaths 2.4%), and ferric carboxymaltose (ROR05 3.03, deaths 0.2%). For anaphylaxis/anaphylactic shock, ROR05 for cases/deaths were: 39.32/13.4%, ferumoxytol; 37.80/4.5%, iron dextran; 17.60/4.7%, iron sucrose; and 8.77/no deaths, ferric carboxymaltose. Downstream medical costs per adverse event were highest with iron dextran (US$8615) and ferumoxytol (US$8164), followed by iron sucrose (US$4212), and ferric carboxymaltose (US$1832).ConclusionsReporting rates of hypersensitivity and anaphylaxis with intravenous iron preparations were highest with ferumoxytol and lowest with ferric carboxymaltose in the US FAERS database. Adverse event-related medical costs were highest for iron dextran and ferumoxytol, and lowest for ferric carboxymaltose.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (10.1007/s40264-020-01022-2) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

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